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Nambaryn Enkhbayar

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Nambaryn Enkhbayar
Image:Nambaryn Enkhbayar 2005.jpg

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Incumbent
Assumed office 
June 24, 2005
Preceded by Natsagiyn Bagabandi
Succeeded by Incumbent

Born June 1, 1958
Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia
Political party Mongolian People's Revolutionary Party


Nambaryn Enkhbayar (Mongolian language: Намбарын Энхбаяр) (born June 1, 1958, in Ulaanbaatar) is the President of Mongolia. Mongolia is a parliamentary country where the presidency has a symbolic role.

Enkhbayar is the ex-chairman of former communist party - Mongolian People's Revolutionary Party (MPRP). Enkhbayar was the Prime Minister of Mongolia from 2000 until 2004 and Speaker of Parliament between 2004 and 2005. He graduated from the Moscow Institute of Literature in 1980 and also attended English language course at Leeds University in England in 1990s. He worked for the Mongolian Writer's Union from 1980 to 1990 as a translator-editor, a secretary general and a vice president. He translated Buddhist teachings into Mongolian. Enkhbayar was elected as a member of the State Great Hural (the Mongolian parliament) in 1992 and served as minister of culture from 1992 to 1996. In 1997, he became the leader of the opposition post-communist Mongolian People's Revolutionary Party, which he had joined in 1985. There, he led his party to victory in 2000 elections. On 26 July 2000, he was unanimously elected as the prime minister in the Parliament with 72 MPRP members out of 76 seats. He is credited with the revitalization of his party. His party lost almost half of its seats in the elections of 2004, and in August 2004, he entered a coalition with opposition parties and became the Speaker of Parliament.

He worked as the Prime Minister of Mongolia between 2000 and 2004. Enkhbayar is harshly criticized because of allegations of corruption in his government. A large group of Mongolians have demonstrated against him and demanded his resignation. [1], [2], [3] While serving as prime minister of Mongolia, Without disclosing the details to Mongolian public, Enkhbayar suddenly settled Mongolia's controversial debt to the former Soviet Union with Russia's Prime Minister Mikhail Kasyanov [4] on December 31, 2003 at USD 250 million. Russia now claims that they got USD 200 million from Mongolia and 50 million USD disappeared from this deal of Enkhbayar and Kasyanov. For this deal, Enkhbayar borrowed USD 50 million from Ivanhoe Mines as a government T-bond with high interest rate. His critics believe that Mongolia should not owe the Soviet Union which used Mongolia as a raw material supplier without reasonable records.

In the presidential elections on May 22, 2005, Enkhbayar was elected to succeed Natsagiyn Bagabandi with 53.4 percent of the vote. His main rival, Mendsaikhan Enkhsaikhan of the Mongolian Democratic Party, collected 20 percent of the vote.

Mongolia's well-known political scientist D.Gankhuyag who has been making extensive research on Enkhbayar's leadership wrote in his article 'National leader's desperate trick' [5] that Nambaryn Enkhbayar is trying to change the Mongolian constitution to make the presidency more powerful.


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Preceded by:
Natsagiyn Bagabandi
President of Mongolia
June 24, 2005 – present
Incumbent
bg:Намбарин Енхбаяр

cs:Nambaryn Enchbajar de:Nambaryn Enchbajar et:Nambarõn Enhbajar es:Nambaryn Enkhbayar fr:Nambaryn Enkhbayar id:Nambaryn Enkhbayar he:נמברין אנחבאיאר lt:Nambarynas Enkbajaras ja:ナンバリーン・エンフバヤル ms:Nambaryn Enkhbayar pl:Nambaryn Enchbajar ru:Энхбаяр, Намбарын fi:Nambaryn Enhbajar sv:Nambaryn Enchbajar zh:那木巴尔·恩赫巴亚尔

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